I look at it more as a fallback in areas where cell service is non-existent. No interest in streaming, etc. Saw a video for the mini on Hobotech that featured a Peakdo battery for the mini. Very intriguing.the starlink roam still has pause feature for free.only 1 month intervals though. the standby is a new feature that costs $5 but even when on standby you still have limited connection. might be good for getting emails. not sure if pause is going away completely or not
Recieved the starlink roam today. Sitting at home. Starlink dish in back yard. Cloudy day a few trees .the wifi is comparable to my home wifi. Speed test says 170 download 25 upload. Home wifi is 185 27. Watched some YouTube videos no problem. Then went to my van out front. Same results . Finally to my camper in the garage. Again same results. antenna in same place. Pretty impressed especially with the camper TV inside a metal shell. Inside a garage.
I'll keep you posted .
Btw the onstar wifi wont work inside the camper without using my phone as a link. And I've tried onstar. Gmc. And explorer van to try to figure out how to connect the secondary battery to the onstar. Nobody has a clue. Still looking but my patience is wearing thin. Onstar is factory installed and Noone seems to know where the module is. I've figured out that the circuit goes through the body control module and the rap system which allows it to run for 20 mins after you shut off the car or open the drivers door. Too bad the reception is decent but I dont want to run down the main battery to use it while not driving
Yeah you would have lost me with the raspberry pie...I prefer pecan myself.... When you star talking RaspberryPI, I was losing my audience. But, if anyone is interested, we can pick that back up in its original thread.
That depends. For Android auto ( Google maps and YouTube music) not really. I laid the antenna on the dashboard against the windshield and it worked fine heading east and west. You wont get the full 300 to 400 mps but for my uses I dont need it. I had it in my backyard. Cloudy day minimal trees and was getting 180mps good enough to play YouTube on the TV in my van out front and the TV in my camper inside the garage. I was pretty impressed.A friend mentioned you do need a clear view; but alignment of the antenna is not a big issue with the number of satellites that have been added.
I was looking at those. There are versions that accept Sims as well so you could get an attorney sim and have your own wifi hotspot without onstarYou may find something like this interesting. Its cheap, runs on USB power and can do quite a bit. I use mine to create a wireless LAN, that I put my media server on - From there, I associate with my laptop and can stream movies and television until my heart is content. Usually about 30 minutes.
I could, if I wanted, have the mini router associate with another 802.11x network such as Starlink, making everything connect beautifully. There are severl other similar models available, this is just the one I settled on becuase of its size.
My media server is something I talked about, and it started out as a project here -- but it got really technical fast, and I kind of stopped developng the documentation -- it was moderately difficult for me, but I quickly realized that for 9 out of 10 people -- it was just out of reach. When you star talking RaspberryPI, Plex (now emby), router configuration - I was losing my audience. But, if anyone is interested, we can pick that back up in its original thread.
I do have the standard that I bought two years ago for camping and traveling. A few times trees have vexed me but I'd say 90% of the time I get enough signal for video to watch at bedtime. I no longer bring a ton of video to watch locally (movies, TV files) and just stream video from my home server. Or watch anything I pay for to watch at home, I can watch on the road (Yankee games). I'll give you it's not cheap (unlimited at $165) but overall I don't travel too much so most months are $5.I just watched this video....I'm currently using a RedPocket-powered hotspot for 40 gig a month, mostly because I find myself in places where there just is no internet for my business. No internet, no billing. No billing, no revenue. It works well, but is still cell dependant and there are a few places I go that it simply does not work.
I'm actually intrigued by Starlink, and have been for some time. I just found out that while on 'standby' the dish is in low-data mode. 750K to 1 megabit. These are slow by modern standards, but these same speeds would have made me GIDDY 10 yeras ago. My DSL was about this speed!
Then, if/when you need FAST...just enable the service and you'll get the speed you expect. I think I may be ordering one of the Mini's!!!!
Yup...lots of exclaimiation points...but I'm paying $40 a month 500 a year for something I really use for 4 or 5 months.
Not necessarily. Mine works pretty decent on the dashboard of the van. And I just got a clamp and a section cup mount which can go on the camper.I do have the standard that I bought two years ago for camping and traveling. A few times trees have vexed me but I'd say 90% of the time I get enough signal for video to watch at bedtime. I no longer bring a ton of video to watch locally (movies, TV files) and just stream video from my home server. Or watch anything I pay for to watch at home, I can watch on the road (Yankee games). I'll give you it's not cheap (unlimited at $165) but overall I don't travel too much so most months are $5.
Look into Tailscale for the networking for being able to watch anything on the road you can watch at home.
I was thinking this spring to get the mini and switch my home Internet to the standard from Spectrum. Help fund the trip to mars.But I'd have to get on the roof so might chicken out.
Nice! Trying to think where I had trouble - the Adirondacks are usually pretty tree covered. I think in at a KOA in Missouri I couldn't get a signal. On our big trip last May it was the only spot over the 25 days.Not necessarily. Mine works pretty decent on the dashboard of the van. And I just got a clamp and a section cup mount which can go on the camper.
I do have the standard that I bought two years ago for camping and traveling. A few times trees have vexed me but I'd say 90% of the time I get enough signal for video to watch at bedtime. I no longer bring a ton of video to watch locally (movies, TV files) and just stream video from my home server. Or watch anything I pay for to watch at home, I can watch on the road (Yankee games). I'll give you it's not cheap (unlimited at $165) but overall I don't travel too much so most months are $5.
Look into Tailscale for the networking for being able to watch anything on the road you can watch at home.
I was thinking this spring to get the mini and switch my home Internet to the standard from Spectrum. Help fund the trip to mars.But I'd have to get on the roof so might chicken out.
My library at home is over 30TB so I would bring some video on a 4TB drive. Give me something to watch. I have my MacBook Air with me just because of astrophotography so it doubles as my "TV" - don't need much screen in a 550! So access to the whole library is worth the money for starlink for sure.tailscale looks a lot like twingate on steroids. Normally I would stream off my plex at home, but internet has been the bottleneck. Which is why I have a synced library on a raspberry pi server. Little work, but it is 95% done. Every once in a while plex freezes, but it’s not terrible. Other servers like jellyfin and emby don’t seem to have a problem. I’m considering upgrading to a 5 and putting a touch screen in….but that’s a summer 2026 project.
Verizon is enforcing its Terms of Service for 5G Home Internet (fixed wireless access) by throttling speeds (e.g., to ~10 Mbps down/3 Mbps up) for customers using the service at an unregistered address. Customers receive warnings and must request an official move to restore full speeds; failure to comply risks termination.
This crackdown addresses network congestion and declining speeds (Verizon's median downloads dropped from 167 Mbps in Q1 2025 to 138 Mbps in Q3), as off-address usage complicates coverage mapping and troubleshooting. Some sales reps previously bypassed the rule for quotas.
The move comes amid surging demand—Verizon added 261,000 FWA subscribers in Q3 2025, reaching 5.4 million—but lower customer satisfaction compared to rivals like T-Mobile. It's driven by consumers switching to affordable fixed wireless options amid rising traditional internet costs and fees.
My library at home is over 30TB so I would bring some video on a 4TB drive. Give me something to watch. I have my MacBook Air with me just because of astrophotography so it doubles as my "TV" - don't need much screen in a 550! So access to the whole library is worth the money for starlink for sure.
Funny have a pi 5 out for delivery right now, but it's for my solar telescope setup. Well if the clouds go away at some point.![]()
Not sure how that works? I have comcast / xfinity for my home wifi and comcast for my cell. Are you saying I could bring the router with me traveling and connect to any wifi available? Wonder if you could use a VPN to say you were home?I know it has been discussed here, but a 'development' on the topic traveled through in inbox today. The mobile carriers have discovered home internet can be profitable, and some (verizon and I believe ATT) offer 'home' internet --- its intended to have the router in your home servicing a fixed operation. Many people have discovered that they can take the router with them when the are roaming.
Now frankly in this day and age, having any kind of a data cap is annoying, using the weakest language possible -- I mean we havn't paid for a long distance phone call in 15 years or more, and 'connected' devices are ubiquitous. I digress.
Apparently, though, Verizon has discovered this 'hack' people are using and is clamping down on it - so use at your own risk.
TL;DR the article:
I only have home internet service (no cable, dish, or other) and because of that the cable company charges me $85/month and seems to raise the fee too often for my taste. A couple years back I looked into Verizon home internet which has been advertised for $50/month. What I found out was that they had to limit the number of customers they would take on because apparently it's limited capacity and when more people are on, speeds go down. Now I'm no power user but I do sometimes stream sports and I have no idea how that would be impacted. And given that my area had access to their home internet but they were no longer offering it due to limitations, I didn't think it sounded like such a great idea anyway.I know it has been discussed here, but a 'development' on the topic traveled through in inbox today. The mobile carriers have discovered home internet can be profitable, and some (verizon and I believe ATT) offer 'home' internet --- its intended to have the router in your home servicing a fixed operation. Many people have discovered that they can take the router with them when the are roaming.
Now frankly in this day and age, having any kind of a data cap is annoying, using the weakest language possible -- I mean we havn't paid for a long distance phone call in 15 years or more, and 'connected' devices are ubiquitous. I digress.
Apparently, though, Verizon has discovered this 'hack' people are using and is clamping down on it - so use at your own risk.
TL;DR the article:
I only have home internet service (no cable, dish, or other) and because of that the cable company charges me $85/month and seems to raise the fee too often for my taste. A couple years back I looked into Verizon home internet which has been advertised for $50/month. What I found out was that they had to limit the number of customers they would take on because apparently it's limited capacity and when more people are on, speeds go down. Now I'm no power user but I do sometimes stream sports and I have no idea how that would be impacted. And given that my area had access to their home internet but they were no longer offering it due to limitations, I didn't think it sounded like such a great idea anyway.
I also found by doing some googling that many people with Verizon home internet were very unhappy with their constantly throttled speeds. Now I'm sure that can vary by where you are, but still...... Hopefully that will be remedied at some point in the future. But after learning that, I just resigned myself to keep paying Spectrum and wait for the day I can tell them to pound sand.
YMMV.
I was just watching a video on musks new bigger rocket and how hes got the next Gen sattelite ready for deployment. Much more bandwidth so should be any problem for big users. They're also offering direct sattelite cell phone service through most services.
No mention on pricing or whether or not the old sattelite dishes are compatible. The cell phone service works with existing phones.
Idk what the lifespan is for the low orbit sattelites but in the next year or 2 the next Gen should replacing them
I think when they expire they just burn up in our atmosphere. But may be wrong.Remember when NASA was worried about space debris? Seriously -- the coordination of all these birds in the air has to be a logistical nightmare. I honestly don't know how they do it....or even could. People are much smarter than me!